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05-12-2013, 09:05 PM | #241 |
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i had just finished corresponding with one of the greatest living scholars. a classicist from Oxford. it was very pleasant but ultimately very depressing.
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05-12-2013, 09:06 PM | #242 | |||
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How would you know that the tomb visit actually happened? How do you know that the story found in John with only one visitor does not have priority over the multiple visitors? If John received the earliest tomb tradition in the gospels, who wrote Joe's verses? If not, how do you know that the single visitor was not the earliest tradition? |
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05-12-2013, 09:13 PM | #243 |
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for me the Marcionite testimony that none of the gospels was written by an eyewitness is sufficient as a working hypothesis
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05-12-2013, 09:17 PM | #244 | ||
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But Stephan,
The Marcionites only accepted (most of) Luke. Everybody knew he was not an eyewitness of Jesus. Quote:
Dan Barker's Easter Challenge Can you name some Mythicists who are recognized scholars in source-criticism? As for the conspiracy theorists, can they account for the sources or (supposedly) just the extant texts? |
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05-12-2013, 09:32 PM | #245 | |
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The Marcionites did not think Matthew, Mark, Luke or John were written by eyewitnesses. One can read De Recta in Deum Fide as if Adamantius knows the Marcionites thought Paul was an eyewitness. This doesn't mean its true or that the Marcionites actually believed that. It just means that we can't assume anything to be true just because we have inherited these ideas. |
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05-12-2013, 09:33 PM | #246 |
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My problem with John is that I can't reconcile the idea of the author of John being an eyewitness when John was present at the Transfiguration and the Gospel of John neglects to mention that narrative.
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05-12-2013, 10:07 PM | #247 | |||
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Gospel Eyewitnesses or your own #403 I link here in which you listed my points and labeled everything an assertion. Perhaps you forgot that I have covered all this and you have seen it. Also see my #244 listing of Teeple's Sources. Circular? Hardly. I lamented the lack of an eyewitness recording these verses and left uncertain the true account that was filtered through two or more men who did record what they heard. Far from assuming the truth of everything, I left much in doubt! Quote:
Do I know the tomb visit really happened? That's the kind of thing critical historians readily acknowledge as meaningful to explain how Christianity arose, regardless of whether a miraculous Resurrection occurred. That's regarded as history, isn't it? That the women saw "real" physical angels or even Jesus himself (John 20:14-17) I cannot affirm just from comparison of these somewhat contrasting ancient texts. If I say I believe it as a Christian do I get automatically banned from FRDB? You and Joseph are making dire threats. |
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05-12-2013, 10:17 PM | #248 |
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No problem at all. John the Apostle (not John Mark who wrote the Passion Narrative) was involved in the editing of all of gJohn, but so much of it happened in Jerusalem that he could not contribute any personal touches. Virtually nothing occurs in Galilee after John 6, certainly not a journey north to Caesarea Phillippi. He does add in most of John 13, the foot-washing etc.
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05-12-2013, 10:18 PM | #249 | ||
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05-12-2013, 10:41 PM | #250 | |
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And have you remembered what you read, spin? If you're talking about the Synoptics, for you meaning Vork's Mark I guess, quite extraneously to my thesis I detailed in #230 in Gospel Eyewitnesses six layers in gMark that I never claimed had any stylistic markers between layers (except to allow for spin's Latinisms within at least the last layer). The layers can be derived only by comparison with the other three gospels, not by style within Mark. If you're talking about John, then I have assiduously detailed stylistic differences between the Signs Source (Synoptic-like statistics), an anarthrous Editor (Beloved Disciple) layer, a P-Strand layer (Pharisees), a necessarily distinct Passion Narrative (overlap with Synoptics), and the remainder not being narrative like the rest but the Discourses. I suppose that I have not elaborated upon historical characters because they are displayed in the texts themselves, but that a specific person was the eyewitness is often not necessary. I now select John Mark as author of the Passion Narrative instead of Peter, Andrew of the Signs and not the other candidate Philip, could make a case for any of the Seventy-Two for author of L, could find John or James as author of Ur-Marcus instead of Peter, and I'm still debating with myself whether Matthew was the sole author of Q1 or was it augmented by Peter or Andrew or _? |
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